Summary
- Cinema has a history of misrepresenting mental health, but there are accurate portrayals that can help educate and destigmatize.
- Authentic depictions of mental illness in movies can provide relatable experiences for viewers and promote understanding.
- Movie characters with mental health disorders can showcase struggles and everyday coping, offering a realistic portrayal.
The following article contains discussions of mental health conditions, violence, and suicide.
While the entertainment industry is notorious for misrepresenting many illnesses, conditions, and disorders, there are many movie characters who accurately portray mental health. Cinema has had a dubious history of portraying mental health in an authentic or even sensitive light. The perceived dramatic nature of a mental illness has notoriously meant it's too often conveyed as a means to broadcast sentimentality or sensationalism. Additionally, "madness" has been used by horror films as a justification for all kinds of unspeakable acts. However, Hollywood also occasionally gets it right, and there are plenty of movie characters with mental disorders that aren't portrayed problematically.
The exploration of mental illness and mental health disorders in movies has improved dramatically over the last few decades, with an emphasis on authenticity and care towards humanization. Depictions that are seen as genuine across myriad genres, from drama to comedy, allow viewers to learn about mental illness through accurate portrayals — perhaps even further cementing the need for understanding in the face of stigmatized thinking and improved mental health programs. These movie characters are shown through their struggles with mental health as well as how they deal with it on a day-to-day basis which could reflect a relatable depiction for many viewers.
20 TV Characters Who Accurately Portray Mental Illness
Mental illness is being discussed more and more on TV today. From Bojack Horseman to Jessica Jones, these are the most accurate portrayals.Pat Solitano - Silver Linings Playbook (2012)
Played By Bradley Cooper
Silver Linings Playbook
- Release Date
- November 16, 2012
- Director
- David O. Russell
- Cast
- Bradley Cooper , Jennifer Lawrence , Julia Stiles , Robert De Niro , Chris Tucker , Dash Mihok , Jackie Weaver
- Runtime
- 122 Minutes
When Pat Solitano (Bradley Cooper) nearly beats his wife's lover to death he's institutionalized, not thrown in jail. The courts recognized the act as an episode of bipolar mania, not as a crime of passion, and his long road to recovery begins. The story of Silver Linings Playbook starts upon his release, when he loses his wife and moves back in with his parents.
Pat struggles with intense emotional swings and gets too worked up about trivial issues, but struggles to succeed because he's perceived as high-functioning. He spends most of the film in the "manic" portion of bipolar disorder, without much of the depressive state, but what viewers do see is very genuine — a man who can't see why no one is reacting to life the way he is.
Lisa Rowe - Girl, Interrupted (1999)
Played By Angelina Jolie
Though Winona Ryder's character was the protagonist of Girl, Interrupted, the suicide attempt that landed her in an all-female mental institution was the catalyst for more engrossing stories featuring her fellow patients. One of the most enigmatic patients she encountered was Lisa Rowe, played with volatile intensity by Angelina Jolie.
Lisa was a sociopath, characterized by a charismatic and manipulative nature she used to elicit close bonds from the patients around her. When she didn't get her way, Lisa's seductive personality turned incredibly abusive, showing a sociopath's lack of remorse even when she drove a fellow patient to suicide.
John Forbes Nash, Jr. - A Beautiful Mind (2001)
Played By Russell Crowe
While there were concerns that a biographical drama about noted mathematician John Forbes Nash, Jr. (Russell Crowe) could evoke an exaggerated take on the mental illness that would tarnish his reputation, A Beautiful Mind doesn't do him a disservice. It instead chronicles his years of professional genius, his downward mental spiral, and his eventual recovery in a tasteful way that isn't romanticized.
The public was gripped by the life of the Nobel Prize winner, who suddenly came to the horrific realization that many of the locations, events, and people that characterized his life never actually existed. Nash emerged victorious over the paranoid delusions brought on by his schizophrenia by acknowledging that though they were there, they would not rule his life.
Charlie Kelmeckis - The Perks Of Being A Wallflower (2012)
Played By Logan Lerman
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
- Release Date
- September 20, 2012
- Director
- Stephen Chbosky
- Cast
- Emma Watson , logan lerman , Ezra Miller , Paul Rudd , Nina Dobrev
- Runtime
- 105minutes
Teen movie The Perks of Being a Wallflower focuses on a boy named Charlie Kelmeckis (Logan Lerman) who's just trying to get through his teenage years while dealing with the overwhelming PTSD and anxiety that comes with trauma. Among the movie's many strengths is Lerman's portrayal of Charlie's mental health issues, which are notably realistic according to many viewers.
This coming-of-age comedy-drama features many of the tropes of teenage films (partying, first love, big exams), but through the lens of a boy dealing with mental illness. His crushingly omnipresent sadness threatens to derail every social victory he attains for himself and will consume him if he doesn't find ways to maintain equilibrium despite innumerable triggers.
21 Amazing Movies That Actually Understand Mental Illness
While cinema often portrays people with mental illness as murderous, there are films out there that show mentally illness a little differently.Cam Stuart - Infinitely Polar Bear (2014)
Played By Mark Ruffalo
Mark Ruffalo is at his mercurial best depicting Cam, a single father suffering from manic depression, unsure of how to take care of himself let alone his two spirited daughters. His family's support has always kept him able to go through life without ever facing his mental illness, but after a severe manic episode hospitalizes him, he's forced to have a wake-up call.
Having lost much of their resources, his wife (Zoe Saldaña) attends Columbia University to get a better degree, and with it a better job. Cam spends the 18 months of her master's program coming to terms with his bipolar diagnosis and raising their two daughters. His struggles are both real, relatable, and inspiring because of his mental illness, not despite it.
Riley - Inside Out (2015)
Played By Kaitlyn Dias
Inside Out
- Release Date
- June 19, 2015
- Director
- Pete Docter
- Cast
- Lewis Black , Mindy Kaling , Phyllis Smith , Amy Poehler , Bill Hader , Richard Kind , Kaitlyn Dias
- Runtime
- 95 minutes
With Inside Out, Pixar created a surprisingly sensitive and deft portrayal of a child suffering from anxiety and depression that was accessible to both children and adults. The film focuses on Riley (Kaitlyn Dias), a happy-go-lucky 11-year-old who becomes depressed when her parents move the family to San Francisco.
Joy has usually been the predominant emotion in Riley's life, but the move gives a voice to Sadness, who soon commandeers her personality. When Joy and Sadness get pulled to the furthest reaches of Riley's subconscious, Anger, Fear, and Disgust assume control. It's one of the best examinations of the role emotions play in human behavioral development in movies.
Raymond Babbitt - Rain Man (1988)
Played By Dustin Hoffman
Autism has a spectrum spanning the most high-functioning and the most severe alterations to behavior, and the further along the spectrum, the greater the chance of sensationalism. Luckily in Rain Man, this isn't the case, and the presentation of Raymond Babbitt's (Dustin Hoffman) autism is authentic and genuine.
He gets entrusted to his younger brother Charlie (Tom Cruise) after the death of their father and has no idea that Charlie is an opportunist using Raymond to get at their father's fortune. He initially copes with Raymond's outbursts for financial gain, not realizing that he's becoming the routine and stability that Raymond needs in his life. By the end of the film, the brothers grow to know a fraternal love unlike anything either has ever experienced.
Craig Gilner - It's Kind Of A Funny Story (2010)
Played By Keir Gilchrist
In It's Kind of a Funny Story, Craig is a depressed teenager who develops suicidal ideation and does the only thing he can think of in a particularly dark moment — checks himself into a mental health clinic to get access to some medication. Once there, he begins to have a different perspective.
Craig encounters patients in the facility with everything from autism to manic depression and beyond, and they're depicted in ways that aren't exaggerated, hypertrophied, or over-the-top. Craig still has his problems, but after five days of bonding, he realizes that they aren't so bad. After all, some people would give anything to be him for just a day, despite his problems.
20 Most Inaccurate Movie Character Portrayals Of Mental Illness
Portraying a specific mental illness can be a difficult thing to get right. Here are some of the most medically inaccurate portrayals in film history.Roy Waller - Matchstick Men (2003)
Played By Nicolas Cage
With Nicolas Cage in the role of Roy, a con artist with obsessive-compulsive disorder, audiences might expect him to bring some of his grandiose showboating to Matchstick Men. However, he portrays the mental illness with understated intensity, especially when it comes to bearing on his vocation and his relationship with his teenage daughter, Angela (Alison Lohman).
Angela yearns to be closer to her father, as well as gain an insider perspective into the world of the con, so she asks to join his next big scheme. While they get closer as they handle the family business, Roy has to understand that the methods he used to control his mental illness have to be adjusted to accommodate his new fatherly role.
Nathaniel Ayers - The Soloist (2009)
Played By Jamie Foxx
The story of Nathaniel Ayers (Jamie Foxx) may seem singular enough to be featured as the premise of a movie, but his circumstances are far more common than viewers might think. He began as a gifted professional musician who suddenly finds himself homeless when he's plagued by the onset of schizophrenia.
Ayers is befriended by Steve (Robert Downey Jr.), a columnist who's searching for the story that will get his life back on track. Steve forms an unlikely friendship with Ayers, and together they bring awareness to not just mental illness, but society's response to it.
Maggie & Milo Dean - The Skeleton Twins (2014)
Played By Kristen Wiig And Bill Hader
When Milo (Bill Hader) attempts suicide, he reunites with his estranged twin sister Maggie (Kristen Wiig) in the hospital. Both suffering from severe depression and anxiety, they are forced to look at how their mental illnesses have shaped the course of their lives and affected the loved ones around them.
Aside from the usual cognitive behavioral therapy, they examine the romantic relationships in their lives to try to find areas of their unhappiness that they can alter. Maggie is married to a loving husband but is unhappy, and Milo has always wondered if his first love is the one who got away. Accepting that depression will always be a part of their lives is the only way they can move forward healthily.
Melvin Udall - As Good As It Gets (1997)
Played By Jack Nicholson
Jack Nicholson's character in As Good as It Gets (for which Nicholson won the Academy Award for Best Actor), who wears gloves in public and won't step on cracks in the sidewalk, is so much more than an eccentric New Yorker. He plays Melvin Udall, a best-selling author diagnosed with OCD, who performs obsessive rituals to combat his intrusively anxious thoughts.
He attempts to control his condition for a chance at a relationship with a waitress at his favorite diner, but he's rude, arrogant, and entitled. His misanthropic personality, which seems exempt from social graces, is comprised of inappropriate emotional responses and forces him to avoid social situations, which is accurately indicative of a number of personality disorders, including narcissistic personality disorder.
Alice Klieg - Welcome To Me (2014)
Played By Kristen Wiig
By fate or coincidence, when Alice Klieg (Kristen Wiig) decides to quit her medications cold turkey, she cashes in a winning lottery ticket. She impulsively purchases a talk show, where she's able to share her opinions with the world, while her borderline personality disorder creeps back into her life.
Alice has manic mood swings, and tumultuous relationships, which lead the people around her to view her as selfish. Though BPD is portrayed using humor in the movie, it accurately works to falsify the burgeoning myth that people with her condition are doomed to be self-destructive and self-involved. Through therapy and reassessment, she's able to take her mental health seriously.
Ellen - To The Bone (2017)
Played By Lily Collins
After spending her teenage years being herded through multiple recovery programs for her eating disorder, Ellen (Lily Collins) doesn't see much point in trying to escape her anorexia, especially since every time she begins a new therapy she ends up weighing less than she did before she started.
In a desperate attempt to save her, her family sends her to a group home, which specializes in mental health for young people. Once she settles into her new environment, she comes out of her shell thanks to a doctor (Keanu Reeves) with non-traditional and inclusive methods of approaching her mental illness. Ellen discovers ways to confront her deep-seated anxieties and embrace self-acceptance.
Joon Pearl - Benny & Joon (1993)
Played By Mary Stuart Masterson
Benny (Aidan Quinn) and his sister Joon (Mary Stuart Masterson) live a fairly uneventful life until she stops taking her medication and her schizophrenia becomes unmanageable. Benny devotes himself to supporting her in those times so that she can live an isolated life far away from the jarring pace of the world.
Eventually, Benny invites Sam (Johnny Depp) into their household at his sister's request and watches her flourish interacting with the eccentric artist. Eventually, however, after Sam and Joon run away to start a sweeping romance, they realize that the stability Benny provided was necessary, and Joon's mental illness needs treatment, not just hopes and dreams.
Scott Carlin - The King Of Staten Island (2020)
Played By Pete Davidson
The King of Staten Island
- Release Date
- June 12, 2020
- Director
- Judd Apatow
- Cast
- Bill Burr , Maude Apatow , Pauline Chalamet , Domenick Lombardozzi , Machine Gun Kelly , Moises Arias , Pamela Adlon , Kevin Corrigan , Carly Aquilino , Bel Powley , Pete Davidson , Jimmy Tatro , Adriana DeMeo , Steve Buscemi , Marisa Tomei
- Runtime
- 136 minutes
Based somewhat on Pete Davidson's life in the wake of losing his father, The King of Staten Island finds the comedian portraying Scott, a young man with a history of mental illness, trying to adjust to the death of his father (who lost his life serving as a firefighter during the September 11th attacks) who also suffered from the same.
Scott's battle with depression, anxiety, and ADD are shown realistically in his issues around impulse control, executive dysfunction, and various neuroses. These are tackled through dark comedy and emotionally vulnerable drama by a compelling performance by Davidson, making the portrayal of mental illness particularly effective.
Nina Sayers - Black Swan (2010
Played By Natalie Portman
Black Swan
- Release Date
- December 3, 2010
- Director
- Darren Aronofsky
- Cast
- Natalie Portman , Mila Kunis , Vincent Cassel , Barbara Hershey , Winona Ryder , Benjamin Millepied
- Runtime
- 108 minutes
In one of the most critically acclaimed performances of her career, Natalie Portman portrays Nina Sayers, a star ballerina in the midst of heavy competition for the lead role in the popular ballet Swan Lake. Fearing she will lose the part to a rival dancer, Nina undergoes a grueling training regiment, the result of which incites a terrifying metamorphosis.
The terrifying psychological thriller trappings of Black Swan might make it seem like a lurid take on mental illness, but the delusions and hallucinations build a truly realistic world for someone who actively suffers from schizophrenia. Far from a simple descent into madness, it is an accurate representation of an obsessive fugue state that is difficult to extricate from.
Lars Lindstrom - Lars And The Real Girl (2007)
Played By Ryan Gosling
When shy Lars Lindstrom (a very against type Ryan Gosling) finally gets a girlfriend his family is overjoyed — until they find out it's a lifesize plastic blow-up doll. Rather than ostracize him, his community plays along with his delusion at the behest of his doctor, helping him come to terms with prior trauma while at the same time becoming more introspective and tolerant as a whole.
Many movies about mental illness focus on the problematic lifestyle of the character afflicted, with them adapting to a neurotypical worldview, rather than the people around them adapting to their neurodivergent perspective. In that respect, Lars and the Real Girl put a positive emphasis on Lars' way of life by exploring how much it has helped his community confront their own biases.
Bonnie, Arnie, Gilbert - What's Eating Gilbert Grape (1993)
Played By Darlene Cates, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Johnny Depp
What's Eating Gilbert Grape?
- Release Date
- December 17, 1993
- Director
- Lasse Hallström
- Cast
- Juliette Lewis , Leonardo DiCaprio , Mary Steenburgen , Laura Harrington , Johnny Depp , Darlene Cates
- Runtime
- 118 minutes
In the wake of a patriarch's absence, an entire family, the Grapes, begins to reveal signs of mental illness to varying degrees, exacerbated by poverty and declining circumstances. Bonnie suffers from severe depression and punishes herself by becoming morbidly obese, her youngest son — played by Leonardo DiCaprio in one of his earliest roles — contends with autism and ADHD, and her eldest son Gilbert (Johnny Depp) tries to hold his clan together while struggling with his own depression and anxiety.
What's Eating Gilbert Grape is about the importance of characters not only identifying their own mental illnesses but locating those around them who understand them as well. No solutions to the Grapes' problems are easy or applicable, and the movie handles the stigma about mental illness and obesity with raw integrity by acknowledging the necessity of strong familial bonds.
Arthur Fleck - Joker (2019)
Played By Joaquin Phoenix
Even if Joker didn't tangentially connect its main character to the DC Universe, its investigation of what might lead to the origins of a "psychopathic clown" would be thought-provoking in the context of a callous society. Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) isn't given a formal diagnosis in the movie but appears to suffer from extreme social anxiety, narcissism, and a lack of empathy.
Phoenix accurately and painfully shows the indignities suffered by Arthur for daring to exist with his conditions in a world that refuses to accommodate them. The loneliness, negative thoughts, and perpetual isolation will be immediately recognizable for anyone with a mental illness, as will the words, "The worst part of having a mental illness is that people expect you to behave as if you don't."